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Court rules mortgage companies have to comply with their own mortgage documents

The Supreme Judicial Court today overturned the foreclosure sale of a Cambridge couple's condominium because the company servicing their mortgage failed to follow its own agreement with them and never told them they had the right to sue to try to stop the foreclosure.

In a 4-3 decision, the state's highest court agreed with Linda Pinti and Lesley Phillips that because Emigrant Mortgage Co. never notified them they had the right to sue to block foreclosure after they missed two payments in 2009 - as specified in their mortgage agreement - the company's sale of the unit to another person was illegal.

Emigrant argued that sending the couple a notice of impending foreclosure was good enough. But the court said that's not good enough in Massachusetts, which lets mortgage holders go to foreclosure without having to go to court first, and that the company's failure to inform the two that they could seek a court hearing was enough to void the foreclosure and sale.

This court has recently reemphasized the point that in light of "the substantial power that the statutory scheme affords to a [mortgagee] to foreclose without immediate judicial oversight, we adhere to the familiar rule that 'one who sells
under a power [of sale] must follow strictly its terms'"; the failure to do so results in "no valid execution of the power,
and the sale is wholly void."

Three justices, however, said the notification requirement was not really as critical to the overall document and that, at best, Pinti and Phillips should have the right to seek damages against Emigrant - but not have the entire sale thrown out. Allowing something like that "will have disruptive and unfair consequences for innocent third-party purchasers for years to come," they wrote.

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Comments

I don't see how it's any different than someone who innocently purchases a stolen good. You don't get to keep the Rolex do you?

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The bank violated procedure here. Let them reimburse the innocent victims for their trouble. Buying a foreclosed home or short sale has extra risks, in exchange for (sometimes) cheaper prices. Hopefully the bank was forthcoming when selling that this was not a normal sale.

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Yep. This is why they offer title insurance. You should absolutely buy title insurance. Doubly so when buying a property that went through foreclosure.

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never notified them they had the right to sue to block foreclosure after they missed two payments in 2009

They have the right to sue to block a foreclosure that was initiated because they missed payments? How screwed up our legal system has become.

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"as specified in their mortgage agreement"

Language that was certainly drafted by the banks themselves, and generally not the result of negotiation.

Seems right to me.

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Or the banks who were foreclosing on mortgages they didn't even have paperwork for anymore? If I'm about to be kicked out of my house because a bank screwed up and *thinks* I missed two payments, I'd like some chance to appeal.

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The bank says they missed payments.

That doesn't mean that they missed payments.

I had the money to buy out and pay off my father's mortgage, but the bank did everything they could to try to prevent me from doing that, including "losing" payments or failing to credit them properly. That's because they were trying to maximize the number of properties they seized under such circumstances, contracts and paperwork be damned. They didn't want their $40K - they wanted the whole $200K house.

Fortunately, I was already in consultation with a lawyer and they got fined for the shit they pulled.

You are both reactionary and naive about the things that crooked people will do to try to steal things. Unfortunately, people with your attitude aid and abet predators by agreeing to laws that enable such abuse.

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