New York, NY - Foreclosure Judge Tosses Out Cases, Brooklyn Style |
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I dont want to put a family on the street unless its legitimate,Justice Arthur M. Schack said. [Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times]Every week, the nation’s mightiest banks come to his court seeking to take the homes of New Yorkers who cannot pay their mortgages. And nearly as often, the judge says, they file foreclosure papers speckled with errors.
He plucks out one motion and leafs through: a Deutsche Bank representative signed an affidavit claiming to be the vice president of two different banks. His office was in Kansas City, Mo., but the signature was notarized in Texas. And the bank did not even own the mortgage when it began to foreclose on the homeowner.
The judge’s lips pucker as if he had inhaled a pickle; he rejected this one.
“I’m a little guy in Brooklyn who doesn’t belong to their country clubs, what can I tell you?” he says, adding a shrug for punctuation. “I won’t accept their comedy of errors.”
The judge, Arthur M. Schack, 64, fashions himself a judicial Don Quixote, tilting at the phalanxes of bankers, foreclosure facilitators and lawyers who file motions by the bale.
While national debate focuses on bank bailouts and federal aid for homeowners that has been slow in coming, the hard reckonings of the foreclosure crisis are being made in courts like his, and Justice Schack’s sympathies are clear.
He has tossed out 46 of the 102 foreclosure motions that have come before him in the last two years. And his often scathing decisions, peppered with allusions to the Croesus-like wealth of bank presidents, have attracted the respectful attention of judges and lawyers from Florida to Ohio to California. At recent judicial conferences in Chicago and Arizona, several panelists praised his rulings as a possible national model.
His opinions, too, have been greeted by a cry of affront from a bank official or two, who say this judge stands in the way of what is rightfully theirs. HSBC bank appealed a recent ruling, saying he had set a “dangerous precedent” by acting as “both judge and jury,” throwing out cases even when homeowners had not responded to foreclosure motions.
Justice Schack, like a handful of state and federal judges, has taken a magnifying glass to the mortgage industry. In the gilded haste of the past decade, bankers handed out millions of mortgages - with terms good, bad and exotically ugly - then repackaged those loans for sale to investors from Connecticut to Singapore. Sloppiness reigned. So many papers have been lost, signatures misplaced and documents dated inaccurately that it is often not clear which bank owns the mortgage.
Justice Schack’s take is straightforward, and sends a tremor through some bank suites: If a bank cannot prove ownership, it cannot foreclose.
“If you are going to take away someone’s house, everything should be legal and correct,” he said. “I’m a strange guy - I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate.”
Justice Schack has small jowls and big black glasses, a thin mustache and not so many hairs combed across his scalp. He has the impish eyes of the high school social studies teacher he once was, aware that something untoward is probably going on at the back of his classroom.
He is Brooklyn born and bred, with a master’s degree in history and an office loaded with autographed baseballs and photographs of the Brooklyn Dodgers. His written decisions are a free-associative trip through popular, legal and literary culture, with a sideways glance at the business pages.
Confronted with a case in which Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs passed a defaulted mortgage back and forth and lost track of the documents, the judge made reference to the film classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the evil banker played by Lionel Barrymore.
“Lenders should not lose sight,” Justice Schack wrote in that 2007 case, “that they are dealing with humanity, not with Mr. Potter’s ‘rabble’ and ‘cattle.’ Multibillion-dollar corporations must follow the same rules in the foreclosure actions as the local banks, savings and loan associations or credit unions, or else they have become the Mr. Potters of the 21st century.”
Last year, he chastised Wells Fargo for filing error-filled papers. “The court,” the judge wrote, “reminds Wells Fargo of Cassius’s advice to Brutus in Act 1, Scene 2 of William Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’: ‘The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.’ ”
Then there is a Deutsche Bank case from 2008, the juicy part of which he reads aloud:
“The court wonders if the instant foreclosure action is a corporate ‘Kansas City Shuffle,’ a complex confidence game,” he reads. “In the 2006 film ‘Lucky Number Slevin,’ Mr. Goodkat, a hit man played by Bruce Willis, explains: ‘A Kansas City Shuffle is when everybody looks right, you go left.’ ”
The banks’ reaction? Justice Schack shrugs. “They probably curse at me,” he says, “but no one is interested in some little judge.”
Little drama attends the release of his decisions. Beaten-down homeowners rarely show up to contest foreclosure actions, and the judge scrutinizes the banks’ papers in his chambers. But at legal conferences, judges and lawyers have wondered aloud why more judges do not hold banks to tougher standards.
“To the extent that judges examine these papers, they find exactly the same errors that Judge Schack does,” said Katherine M. Porter, a visiting professor at the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and a national expert in consumer credit law. “His rulings are hardly revolutionary; it’s unusual only because we so rarely hold large corporations to the rules.”
Banks and the cottage industry of mortgage service companies and foreclosure lawyers also pay rather close attention.
A spokeswoman for OneWest Bank acknowledged that an official, confronted with a ream of foreclosure papers, had mistakenly signed for two different banks - just as the Deutsche Bank official did.
Deutsche Bank, which declined to let an attorney speak on the record about any of its cases before Justice Schack, e-mailed a PDF of a three-page pamphlet in which it claimed little responsibility for foreclosures, even though the bank’s name is affixed to tens of thousands of such motions. The bank described itself as simply a trustee for investors.
Justice Schack came to his recent prominence by a circuitous path, having worked for 14 years as public school teacher in Brooklyn. He was a union representative and once walked a picket line with his wife, Dilia, who was a teacher, too. All was well until the fiscal crisis of the 1970s.
“Why’d I go to law school?” he said. “Thank Mayor Abe Beame, who froze teacher salaries.”
He was counsel for the Major League Baseball Players Association in the 1980s and ‘90s, when it was on a long winning streak against team owners. “It was the millionaires versus the billionaires,” he says. “After a while, I’m sitting there thinking, ‘He’s making $4 million, he’s making $5 million, and I’m worth about $1.98.’ ”
So he dived into a judicial race. He was elected to the Civil Court in 1998 and to the Supreme Court for Brooklyn and Staten Island in 2003. His wife is a Democratic district leader; their daughter, Elaine, is a lawyer and their son, Douglas, a police officer.
Justice Schack’s duels with the banks started in 2007 as foreclosures spiked sharply. He saw a plague falling on Brooklyn, particularly its working-class black precincts. “Banks had given out loans structured to fail,” he said.
The judge burrowed into property record databases. He found banks without clear title, and a giant foreclosure law firm, Steven J. Baum, representing two sides in a dispute. He noted that Wells Fargo’s chief executive, John G. Stumpf, made more than $11 million in 2007 while the company’s total returns fell 12 percent.
“Maybe,” he advised the bank, “counsel should wonder, like the court, if Mr. Stumpf was unjustly enriched at the expense of W.F.‘s stockholders.”
He was, how to say it, mildly appalled.
“I’m a guy from the streets of Brooklyn who happens to become a judge,” he said. “I see a bank giving a $500,000 mortgage on a building worth $300,000 and the interest rate is 20 percent and I ask questions, what can I tell you?”
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Read Comments (26) — Post Yours »
1
Aug 30, 2009 at 10:14 PM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Wow what a judge
2
Aug 30, 2009 at 10:06 PM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Kol Hakavod to this Judge, Americans and American Businesses need to learn that its not OK to rape, lie, cheat, steal or swindle each other, financially, or otherwise.
3
Aug 30, 2009 at 11:22 PM cher Says:Report as Inappropriate
Wow! It's people like this that actually make the system look humane! Thank you, judge, for caring enough to seek justice!
4
Aug 31, 2009 at 07:14 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
In the long run mortgages still need to be paid.
I think the rationale here is that with all the short cuts and mistatements the banks are doing there is the potential for a foreclosure when the mortgage has been paid. It might be rare but I will bet there are such cases.
5
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:56 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Seems strange to have to say Yasher Koach to a judge for upholding the law. But he is right. lazy judges throughout this country are enforcing illegal foreclosures. Those judges are essentially accomplices to theft of peoples homes by the large reckless corporations that got us into this mess.
6
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:35 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Wish he'd been there for us when we were served foreclosure papers.
7
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:00 AM Sick and tired Says:Report as Inappropriate
Sure why not blame the banks... I am not apposed to a judge requiring that the law to kept to, but are we forgetting that the borrower has not paid his mortgage and living free in a home he doesn't own? All at the banks expense. I am not saying the banks didnt practice shotty lending (at best) but the borrowers all practiced shotty borrowing too. Why doesn't the judge haul them into court and ask them a simple question... why are you not paying your mortgage? Why is the bank and corporate America always to blame? If you can't afford to borrow dont! If my credit card gives me a $20,000 credit line and I blow through it but don't pay it back is it now the credit card's fault? Or was I being irresponsible? So banks took a hit, they lost billions of dollars and many failed, those who are still around are trying to re group, why must the court and this judge sit and decide that a bunch of free loaders get to stay in homes they won't pay for while banks continue to loose money? Why not hold the home owner to the same level of scrutiny as he is the banks?
8
Aug 31, 2009 at 07:38 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
At the end of the story, it is the borrowers who are the thiefs, not the bank! They should be mobing out at their own will, and rent some apartment. So what's the excitement abouut some liberal judge who doesn't care about the ultimate law?
9
Aug 31, 2009 at 03:20 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
So I guess its OK not to pay!
10
Aug 31, 2009 at 01:36 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Having followed a recent case, I can say: Judge Shack is a clever and fair judge.
May he continue to help protect his fellow citizens from those who prey on them.
We wish you success!
11
Aug 31, 2009 at 12:09 AM PMO Says:Report as Inappropriate
What I love about this judge is that he is playing the honesty card. Far too many people are saying "oh, you can't throw people out of their houses...". He does not say that. Looking more at his rulings, he does not excuse the deplorable, gluttonous behavior that got most people into trouble with their mortgages in the first place. However, he holds the banks just as accountable for their sloppy, gluttonous ways. Such incredible honesty and fairness is RARELY seen anymore in this increasingly hate-filled, extremely ideological world.
I can get behind anyone whose ideology is "HONESTY".
12
Aug 31, 2009 at 09:16 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
He is a crook just like Robin Hood. It isn't fair to steal from the rich and give to the poor. His mentioning the salary of a bank executive in a ruling proves that he is jealous, biased and should be thrown off the bench.
People that borrow money, should repay it. If the bank wants to foreclose they should not be stopped because of a technicality IF the whole picture shows that they are the creditors and are within the terms of the loan docs and the law.
13
Aug 31, 2009 at 09:47 AM esther Says:Report as Inappropriate
to #s 4,7 and ,8.yes the borrowers never should have bought homes they couldn't afford but at the same time you need to understand the documented gross mismanagement by several of the lenders.they were so swept up in a business wide frenzy of greed that they aggressively marketed and approved many,many loans that simple common sense should have told them not to.if both parties are guilty,the law should be used equally to protect and advocate for both.
14
Aug 31, 2009 at 10:28 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ He is a crook just like Robin Hood. It isn't fair to steal from the rich and give to the poor. His mentioning the salary of a bank executive in a ruling proves that he is jealous, biased and should be thrown off the bench.
People that borrow money, should repay it. If the bank wants to foreclose they should not be stopped because of a technicality IF the whole picture shows that they are the creditors and are within the terms of the loan docs and the law.
”
it would seem you did not read the article
if a bank files papers that contain mistakes or cant prove that they own the mortgage then perhaps they don't really own the mortgage on the house and they cant foreclose on it
as for mentioning the salary it would seem he is saying first clean up your own backyard before you come to someone else's backyard
15
Aug 31, 2009 at 10:52 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
yasher koiach to the good judge for making everybody play by the rules.
16
Aug 31, 2009 at 12:13 PM Torah Says:Report as Inappropriate
You don't have to be Shlomo HaMelech to know that you have to have proof of ownership to foreclose !!! Haven't you read that Nigerian Scammers were filing new deeds on Manhattan office buildings? If the Clerk did not question the paperwork the Nigerians would be the owners of all of Manhattan by now AND maybe even YOUR home. As we learn in Bava Basra: Call hazaka she'ain im a tainah aina chazakah !!!
17
Aug 31, 2009 at 12:32 PM Manhattan Lawyer Says:Report as Inappropriate
People who post and laud the Judge don't know anthing about this. Ask any lawyer who regularly goes before him. He is a product of the Kings County Democratic club politics (his wife is a district leader, as well) and good luck to you if the adversary is also a member in good standing of that club.The banks are generally represented by non-Brooklyn firms, like Steven Baum who is mentioned in the article. His office is upstate.
I could say a lot more... but better to end now. Ask lawyers who appear before him.
18
Aug 31, 2009 at 02:29 PM Raphael Kaufman Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ He is a crook just like Robin Hood. It isn't fair to steal from the rich and give to the poor. His mentioning the salary of a bank executive in a ruling proves that he is jealous, biased and should be thrown off the bench.
People that borrow money, should repay it. If the bank wants to foreclose they should not be stopped because of a technicality IF the whole picture shows that they are the creditors and are within the terms of the loan docs and the law.
”
Hamotzei mechaveiro alav ha raiya. Al pi halacha, if Reuven borrows money from Shimon and, after the term of the loan expires, can't produce the shtar halvah, he doesn't collect. Reuven may be a crook but Shimon still has to have his papers in order to collect. Same here. I agree that folks who borrow money should pay it back but, on the other hand, the lender can't collect on a simple claim of debt. The burden of proof, in secular law as well as halacha, is on the creditor.
19
Aug 31, 2009 at 04:08 PM Sick and Tired Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ Hamotzei mechaveiro alav ha raiya. Al pi halacha, if Reuven borrows money from Shimon and, after the term of the loan expires, can't produce the shtar halvah, he doesn't collect. Reuven may be a crook but Shimon still has to have his papers in order to collect. Same here. I agree that folks who borrow money should pay it back but, on the other hand, the lender can't collect on a simple claim of debt. The burden of proof, in secular law as well as halacha, is on the creditor. ”
Unless of course the borrower doesnt deny he owes the money (Both in Halachah and common law) The owners of the homes are not denying they borrowed the money, if they were this would be a completely different case (not any better). Here they know the money is borrowed but they simply can't afford to pay it, which is sad but no more legal or appropriate. Either sit down and reneogotiate with your lender, if they are willing to do so, or suffer the consenquence of your actions. Its not pretty, and sometimes you have to learn the hard way. But this isn't up to a judge to deny the banks their rights to be paid. We all know the bank is owed the money, the judge is using a technicality, one which the bank should have dont a better job at keeping records, none the less, the point is a borrower ignoring his obligation to pay while living in a house is stealing. plain and simple
20
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:42 PM lisamarie Says:Report as Inappropriate
Go Torah, thats the reason they have LAWS and criteria. If not, anybody could file to foreclose on anybody in a no note world. what a bunch of idiots to think this Judge is wrong. Probably some goofball lawyers filing 'frivilious' lawsuits with no standing and getting kicked in the keister for it! Goody Goody.
21
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:38 PM lisamarie Says:Report as Inappropriate
You people have no concept of what this Judge is doing. He did not say " Don't pay your mortgage". He said, " pay the proper entity." Anybody who thinks you should pay a bank just because they say so, is an idiot. Do you get that the mortgages were sold, then sold, then sold again and nobody knows who really owns them??? Who's fault is that? The judge knows the law, not you!
22
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:45 PM lisamarie Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ Wow! It's people like this that actually make the system look humane! Thank you, judge, for caring enough to seek justice! ”
Amen. Thank you Sir. We need more Judges like this. just uphold the law, thats all.
23
Aug 31, 2009 at 05:51 PM lisamarie Says:Report as Inappropriate
In a no note world anybody could foreclose on anybody. Just say " I can't prove it, but they owe me money." This Judge is only upholding the law. Thank You Judge. We need more like him.
24
Aug 31, 2009 at 06:20 PM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ He is a crook just like Robin Hood. It isn't fair to steal from the rich and give to the poor. His mentioning the salary of a bank executive in a ruling proves that he is jealous, biased and should be thrown off the bench.
People that borrow money, should repay it. If the bank wants to foreclose they should not be stopped because of a technicality IF the whole picture shows that they are the creditors and are within the terms of the loan docs and the law.
”
they should be stopped because of a technicality- that's why rules exist, to be enforced.
25
Aug 31, 2009 at 07:13 PM Robert Ponte Says:Report as Inappropriate
Great job in taking action but the real point is being missed not that this great Judge would even be privy to the following. The loans made to consumers by pretenter lenders have been, number 1 paid off by the investors of securitzed loans, loan paid off why is there a foreclosure action. # 2 Even if the pretender lender has the note they are NOT legally the holder in due course. I could go on and on but most of this is at http://livinglies.wordpress.com/
26
Nov 26, 2009 at 08:31 AM Gigi in Fla. Says:Report as Inappropriate
The judge is doing his job, correctly. He is not throwing foreclosures out to let people stay in homes without paying. The foreclosures are being filed incorrectly by parties who do not even own the mortgage and note. The lenders gambled with loans from 2005-2008 and sold them as securities, so the loans were bought and sold several times to the extent that notes were lost and Trusts have portions of the loans now. It is very complex, but many parties filing the foreclosures are not legally allowed to do so, because they do not own and hold the original mortgage and note, and they can't prove who does. People want to pay their mortgages and refinance to fixed rates. But they have no idea who owns their loans now! Whose fault is that?