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Archive for the ‘Foreclosures’ Category

Sacramentans sue lenders to save homes – but very few succeed!

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Sacramentans struggling to keep their homes increasingly are suing their lenders for fraud, even though judges rarely rule in their favor.

Desperation has led some of these homeowners to pay thousands of dollars to people who are not lawyers to help prepare their cases. Others hire attorneys in lawsuit mills that aggressively solicit for clients.

“It’s the new scam,” said Tom Layton, an investigator for the State Bar of California.

The number of lawsuits filed by individuals against banks and mortgage companies in the Sacramento region has more than doubled, rising to about 250 in the last six months, up from about 115 from the same period two years ago, according to a Bee review of court records in Sacramento and Placer counties.

Many of the lawsuits are filed by frustrated owners tired of dealing with banks that repeatedly transfer calls or reject loan modifications after a successful trial.

But homeowners don’t always know what they’re getting into when they go to court. Some unscrupulous operators, Layton said, are charging large fees for little work.

The Legislature barred lawyers and non-lawyers alike from charging upfront fees to file a loan modification; however, there is no ban on collecting such fees for preparing a lawsuit.

“Now we’re seeing the loan mod people morph into the sue-your-bank people,” Layton said.

Stephen C. Ruehmann, a Folsom lawyer who has filed dozens of recent lawsuits against lenders, agreed that some people are taking advantage of homeowner desperation. Others, though, are fighting for homeowners who have no other recourse.

“(Banks) don’t have any motivation to change; they’ve already been bailed out,” Ruehmann said.

Local judges, though, have traditionally been resistant to these types of fraud claims. In Sacramento County, 20 of the 24 homeowners who sued their lenders in Superior Court during a six-month period exactly two years ago have since lost their homes, according to court records and Foreclosures.com, a tracking firm.

Thirteen of those homeowners represented themselves in court; twelve of the 13 have lost their homes.

Despite that record, the trend of homeowners representing themselves has accelerated. More than 50 local residents who filed lawsuits during the past six months don’t have counsel.

“It’s a sad situation,” said Lawrence Green, professor of law at the University of California, Davis. “People not represented by a lawyer face a much harder time prevailing.”

Man paid paralegal $5,500

Sacramento resident Charles Ratliff is among those going it alone. He paid a Southern California paralegal $5,500 to prepare a complaint against IndyMac and others.

He filed his complaint in January. A judge denied his request for an order to stop the foreclosure, saying he was unlikely to win his case. The bank repossessed his house in March.

Ratliff said he regrets filing his lawsuit, which has sat dormant since he lost his home. “I fault myself,” he said.

He said he was introduced to the paralegal, Camilla Williams, by Sacramento real estate agent Kathleen Petroff, who was working with him on a short sale.

Petroff said she also introduced another one of her clients, Bay Area resident Clifton Constantine, to Williams, but never vouched for the paralegal’s services. She said she took a one-time payment of $200 from Williams but turned down an offer from Williams to pay her $500 per referral.

“I told them all, ‘It’s your own choice,’ ” Petroff said of her clients.

Reached by phone, Constantine said Williams wanted more than he could afford to prepare a lawsuit against American Home Mortgage Servicing and North American Title Co.

“She said, ‘Cliff, I’ve been praying about this and I want to help you guys,’ ” he said.

Even with an initial discount, Constantine said he wound up paying Williams more than $20,000 for his case in San Francisco Superior Court. The judge issued a preliminary ruling for Constantine’s lenders, but has given him a chance to amend his complaint.

Jim Towery, the State Bar’s chief trial counsel, said people without a law license should not be preparing lawsuits. “It is illegal,” he said. “It falls under the category of the unlicensed practice of law.”

In a brief phone interview, Williams declined to answer questions about her business, including how many clients she has or where she received paralegal training.

“I haven’t done anything illegal,” she said.

When informed of Towery’s comments, Williams said, “I’m not even aware of any law like that.”

While homeowners such as Ratliff and Constantine have tried to fight the banks on their own in court, others have turned to law firms that specialize in such cases.

Sacramento resident Maria Montoya-Cano, for instance, has been paying $1,500 a month to the Roseville-based United Law Center to pursue a fraud case against her lender.

Montoya-Cano, who filed her case in late October, alleges her mortgage officer and bank incorrectly told her the only loan she could get had an adjustable rate. That rate has since reset to an untenable level, she said.

The bank that gave her the loan went under in 2008. Her original mortgage broker said her case lacks merit.

A judge recently ruled against her request for an injunction against the current holders of her loan, saying Montoya-Cano’s case has little chance of success.

So Montoya-Cano has filed for bankruptcy protection to save her home. She’s selling a few rental properties she owns at rock-bottom prices to help pay her legal bills and other debts. She’s also taking care of her ailing mother and preparing for the return of her Marine son from Afghanistan.

“He told me not to worry – that he would find a job and help me out,” she said.

Montoya-Cano said she is happy with United Law Center’s representation. Her lawyer did not return a call for comment. Asked why she continues to pursue her case, Montoya-Cano said, “I’m just not through fighting. We can’t let the banks get away with this.”

False claims usually alleged

Lawsuits against lenders generally are based on the same argument: Banks and mortgage brokers made false claims during the boom, telling borrowers they could easily refinance their loans before interest rates reset, or didn’t disclose the true terms of loans.

The lawsuits often allege that lenders knew these statements were untrue, but were interested in making a quick buck by selling the mortgage on the secondary market.

Some of the lawsuits also allege that banks set conditions for trial loan modifications, then denied those modifications even after borrowers met the conditions.

Legal experts contacted by The Bee said it’s hard to prove fraud claims, even though dubious lending practices were widespread during the real estate boom.

“After all, borrowers typically did sign loan applications, escrow instructions, promissory notes, trust deeds and disclosures,” said Green, the UC Davis law professor.

Another obstacle facing borrowers is that it’s tough to prove a fraud conspiracy between the mortgage brokers, banks and investors.

Even if a bank committed fraud while giving a loan, the investors who bought that loan on the secondary market aren’t liable if they didn’t have direct knowledge of the fraud, said John Sprankling, a professor at the University of the Pacific’s McGeorge School of Law.

And if the loan holders aren’t liable, the homeowner likely doesn’t have a shot of keeping the house.

The response of banks to these lawsuits is often uniform. They say that even if everything in the complaint is true, it doesn’t constitute fraud. They file a request, usually successful, to dismiss the case or deny an injunction keeping the bank from taking a home.

Michael P. Malloy, a McGeorge professor, said judges may be more amenable to fraud lawsuits after a spate of “robo-signing” scandals revealed some lenders’ shoddy foreclosure practices.

“The courts are going to take their time and not treat these cases as routine,” Malloy said.

But, like other legal experts, Malloy cautioned that proving mortgage fraud takes a lot of work, and is tough to do without records outlining false promises.

“If all you have is a batch of paperwork and a vague recollection of what someone said to you, you have a real tough road ahead,” he said.

Foreclosure.com Founder Facing Housing Troubles

Monday, January 17th, 2011

Tyler Smith & Team ranked #24 in the Nation

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

  For the months of January and February we were ranked in the top 50 nationwide. We came in at #24 and are very excited. We have one of the hardest working teams out in the market place!!! Thank you to all of our Buyers, Sellers, and Asset Managers who trusted us!! We are here to serve!!!

Foreclosures’ collateral damage widespread

Friday, February 12th, 2010

If you’re among the thousands of Sacramento-area homeowners who played it conservative during the housing boom, who didn’t refinance or flip to a bigger house, everyone else’s foreclosures reached out and smacked you anyway.

Sales prices are lower. There’s less home equity to tap into. Local services have been shredded by falling property tax revenue.

Such repo collateral damage is why so many owners who pay their mortgages on time are so grouchy.

Rob Wassmer hasn’t been affected so much. Fourteen years ago he bought an east Sacramento house – in the Fab 40s – cheaply at the very bottom of the last housing bust. His older neighborhood has largely escaped the brunt of 52,000 foreclosures across the Sacramento region since 2007.

But Wassmer knows the financial whipping people have taken in Lincoln, Elk Grove, North Highlands and Yuba City. Being an academic, he knew there had to be a number for the carnage.

“I knew this kind of research had been done. I wanted to do a study of Sacramento,” said Wassmer, chairman of California State University, Sacramento’s department of public policy and administration.

Wassmer analyzed $9 billion in sales prices from 36,822 home sales in Sacramento, Yolo, Yuba, Sutter, Placer and El Dorado counties between January 2008 and June 2009. Almost half were homes sold by banks. The other half were sold by regular folks.

He concluded that the foreclosed homes cost this one region of America $2.7 billion in price cuts and lost equity over just 18 months.

• The repos sold for $659 million less simply because they were bank-owned and differed from normal sales. They took $1 billion more in price cuts because they were near other repos.

• Both reductions then stripped $1 billion from sale prices of nearby homes never in foreclosure danger.

Collectively, these foreclosures cost local governments $27.1 million in property taxes. Reassessments will likely take more.

Said Wassmer, “This is a call for regulation.” He suggests a federal law to make lenders and borrowers meet in “structured mediation” at least once before foreclosure.

Few ideas have proved so far to be the solution. See the research directly at: >www.csus.edu/indiv/w/wassmerr/ResForeclosure.pdf

How to buy a Bank-Owned home, too funny!!

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Expected Wave of Sacramento Foreclosures Only a Trickle

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

 

SACRAMENTO, CA – Sacramento’s home prices are projected to drop 15.7 percent for the year, but that’s good news. Other counties are expected to fall 19 percent to 20 percent.

Much of Sacramento’s good fortune is due to the lack of foreclosures actually hitting the market. Banks are holding on to thousands of foreclosed properties in the Sacramento region. But, they are coming on the market in dribbles. So slowly, they are snatched up in a few days. That kind of demand is pushing up the price of homes that are $300,000 and under.

What was expected to be a flood of foreclosures is turning out to be a trickle. Michael Lyon of Lyon Real Estate agreed.

“Now that we’ve talked to the banks and found out what’s going on, they don’t have the personnel to do the processing to get it out,” Lyon said.

Lyon said the federal government has put heavy restrictions on banks that took bailout money when it comes to following through on foreclosures.

“There’s too much of a bureaucratic mess to really throw these things out on the streets so they’re coming in at a rather absorbable rate, which is keeping that low end, under $300,000,” said Lyon. “It’s becoming a seller’s market. I didn’t think I would be saying this for years.”

Lyon predicts that instead of seeing a wave of foreclosures sweep in over the next few months, it will likely now be a steady stream over the next few years.

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California selling buildings worth $2 billion to raise cash

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

 

As the California economy roared in the 1990s and tax revenues poured into a treasury overseen by Gov. Pete Wilson, the state laid plans for a series of new office buildings in Sacramento to spare itself from paying rent to other landlords.

Barely a decade later, the Schwarzenegger administration is launching a process to sell many of the same buildings that were originally touted as long-term money savers for taxpayers. The goal today is more immediate: pay off debt and steer cash into the state’s depleted general fund. It’s among a variety of short-term crisis solutions that include selling surplus state property, moves also being undertaken in cash-strapped Arizona.

In California, 11 state-owned sites with an estimated value of almost $2 billion will be listed for sale in early 2010 to pay off about $1.4 billion in bonds and net another $600 million “to support other critical state government programs,” said state Department of General Services spokesman Eric Lamoureux.

The state wouldn’t move out of the buildings; it would continue to lease them from the new owners.

The sell-off has lit up the skies for brokers in an otherwise downcast office real estate sector, where few buildings are being bought, sold or even listed, especially in Sacramento. It’s likewise called fresh attention to the state’s battered finances and stirred banter about whether it’s smart to sell long-term real estate assets for short-term goals in a weak market.

Many in the real estate industry acknowledge it’s a close call, but believe “beautiful class A” state buildings with a single tenant will command premium prices.

“It’s unfortunate they would sell them. But they definitely have a need for financing right now, for equity to solve this budget crisis,” said Tom Aguer, president of Sacramento-based commercial real estate brokers Aguer Havelock Associates. “It’s a very creative way for them to fix their problem. But in the long term, these are great assets.”

Brokers like Aguer and others among the nation’s leading real estate firms are already assembling proposals and lining up national teams to broker the sales. The state is demanding an experienced partner: a firm that has done five separate deals of $20 million or more in the past seven years, and at least $150 million in total deals in that span.

No one can calculate for certain the fees such a deal could bring a brokerage firm. But it’s widely said in the industry that the higher the price, the lower the commission. Even a commission as low as one-quarter of 1 percent of almost $2 billion in sales could net a firm nearly $5 million.

Specifically, the state is proposing a so-called “sale/leaseback” deal in which buyers of state buildings would rent them to the state afterward.

“We intend to maintain 100 percent occupancy in the buildings just as we have today,” said Lamoureux, whose department manages state buildings. “We’re just looking to sell the property and lease back over an extended term, probably along the line of 20 years or so.”

Brokers say the lease-back provision is likely to stir interest among risk-averse investors known in the trade as “coupon clippers.” Those are big institutional investors such as pension funds and insurance companies.

“There are numerous buyers looking for single-tenant buildings with the long-term leases. It’s a steady income. It’s a low-risk deal,” said Nico Coulouras, vice president in Sacramento for Lowe Enterprises, a Los Angeles-based development and investment firm.

Among the state complexes proposed for sale are some of Sacramento’s biggest buildings and most distinctive landmarks: downtown’s massive East End Complex next to Capitol Park, finished in 2003; the 17-story Attorney General Building on I Street, completed in 1995; and the sprawling 1.8 million-square-foot campus of the Franchise Tax Board, expanded earlier this decade at the city’s eastern edge.

Elsewhere, fixtures of the Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles skylines – bearing names of politicians from Ronald Reagan to Hiram Johnson – will also be sold.

Lennar falls deeper into red

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Signs that the housing market is gaining traction have yet to pull Lennar Corp., one of the nation’s largest homebuilders, out of the red.

The Miami-based homebuilder (NYSE: LEN and NYSE: LEN-B) said it lost $171.6 million, or 97 cents a share, on revenue of $720.7 million for the third quarter ended Aug. 31. A year ago, it reported a net loss of $89 million, or 56 cents a share, on revenue of $1.11 billion.

The third quarter results included write-downs totaling 76 cents a share.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a 46-cent loss on revenue of $774 million.

Lennar was the area’s fifth-largest homebuilder in 2008, selling 277 homes in the six-county Sacramento region with a 5.7 percent market share, according to analyst Hanley Wood Market Intelligence.

Lennar president and chief executive officer Stuart Miller said the overall housing market is on the “road to recovery.”

“While high unemployment and foreclosures will continue to present challenges, consumer sentiment has significantly improved as homebuyers have recognized that the residential housing market is stabilizing,” he said.

Miller said the company’s strategy is to target first-time buyers and bargain-hunters, which are helping new home orders rise each month. New orders were still down 8 percent in the third quarter, but that decline was the smallest percentage year-over-year decline since November 2006.

“In order to capitalize on the improvement in our sales pace, we increased our home starts during the quarter, which will lead to higher deliveries in the fourth quarter,” Miller said. “We are also encouraged by the continued improvement in our cancellation rate.”

The cancellation rate dropped to 19 percent from 27 percent, gross margin on home sales shrunk to 15.6 percent ($98.9 million) from 18 percent ($179.4 million).

Third-quarter home sales revenue in the third quarter decreased 36 percent, to $635.3 million from nearly $1 billion in 2008. The drop was mostly due to a 28 percent decrease in home deliveries and a 12 percent decrease in the average sales price of homes delivered.

Year-over-year, the average sales price was down by $30,000 – to $239,000.

wow..$10M in stimulus funds for empty downtown senior high-rise

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Federal stimulus funding is bringing $10 million to restore an empty residential high-rise at 7th and I streets in downtown Sacramento.

“We were high-fiving each other. It’s not every day you get $10 million in a competitive grant project,” said Nick Chhotu, director of public housing at the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency. The money is headed toward a thorough facelift for the 12-story Riverview Apartments owned by SHRA. It’s a senior complex built in the late 1970s at 626 I St. The building has been empty two years.

Plans are to start construction late next year after getting up to $6 million more in federal funds. The building, with 108 rooms for people 62 and older, needs new windows, a new electrical system and new plumbing, a job that will run well into 2011, said Chhotu.

The Public Housing Capital funds are provided through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The agency said Sacramento’s $10 million is among the largest grants nationally, and one of two on the West Coast. The other: Seattle.

Here is the building everyone is talking about:

Slow recovery ahead: buck stops in the pocket

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Star-spangled camper ... a homeless man in a temporary tent city in Sacramento, California

Star-spangled camper … a homeless man in a temporary tent city in Sacramento, California Photo: Getty

The continuing fear of job losses in the US means consumers are saving rather than spending – denying fuel to the retail engine of the economy.

EVEN in the affluent US capital, a city that has been relatively insulated from the worst recession since Great Depression, the beggars are visible. They sleep on the street just a block from the White House and at major intersections they wait for fellow Americans to come to a standstill and spare a dollar.

Many carry signs telling their personal story: laid off, returned Iraq vet, lost the house and the job, got sick and no health care.

A year after the US financial markets went into a tailspin, its economy is showing tentative signs of a weak recovery but unemployment continues to rise, though not at the terrifying rate of six months ago, when 600,000 people a month were joining the jobless lines.

Something else has happened in America as well. The era of easy credit that fuelled two decades of mostly spectacular growth is over, not just on Wall Street. The American consumer has started saving. Mortgages, personal loans and even credit cards are harder to get. Consumer credit was down 5.2 per cent annualised between April and June. Revolving credit, which includes credit cards, was down 9 per cent.

The turbocharged consumer market that powered the American economy since the 1980s has run out of puff. These combined, related factors – people don’t spend if they fear for their jobs – are likely to define the US recovery. It will be slow and painful.

The jobless rate rose to 9.7 per cent in August and is expected to peak above 10 per cent in the months ahead. It is already there in at least 15 states and some economists predict it could be five years before the US economy generates enough jobs to overcome those lost and to employ the new workers entering the labour force.

This fear of job losses is likely to keep consumers’ wallets in their pockets. Without a return to spending – retail sales make up 70 per cent of the US economy – it seems inevitable the recovery will be slower than in the past.

So what are the positives? Retail sales have shown signs of improvement and the federal stimulus package is working its way into the economy.

The retail figures for August were up 2.7 per cent, the biggest jump since January 2006, and vehicle sales up 11.9 per cent.

Excluding vehicles, retail sales were up 1.1 per cent – the comparable figure in July was a 0.6 per cent decrease – but the boost was due in part to higher petrol prices at convenience stores. Most analysts are cautious about popping the champagne corks too early and will wait for a stronger spending trend to emerge.

In the housing market – which helped spark the crisis – there are tentative signs of stabilisation. Home foreclosures dipped slightly in August from July but are still 18 per cent above a year ago. The highest foreclosure rate is in Nevada, with one house in 62.

On home prices, the Case-Shiller Index has shown increases for May and June after 37 months of decline. The number of home sales has risen too.

”The only doubts about it are the market is rather abnormal now with all these foreclosure sales,” said Robert Shiller, who helped develop the index.

Falls in house prices have been huge – in some markets as much as 50 per cent. Many Americans, perhaps a quarter of those with mortgages, owe more than their homes are worth.

The Obama Administration’s ability to stimulate the economy further is severely curtailed by its huge budget deficits – and Congress has run out of patience with financial bail-outs.

“I don’t think we are out of the woods yet,” President Barack Obama said this week. “We need to be careful about taking the crutches away from the patient too early.”