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 | Fixing the Mortgage Mess: The Game-Changing Implications of Bain vis MERS By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 27, 2012 Two landmark developments on August 16th give 
	momentum to the growing interest of cities and counties in addressing the 
	mortgage crisis using eminent domain:  (1) The Washington State Supreme Court held in 
	
	Bain v. MERS, et al., that an electronic database called Mortgage 
	Electronic Registration Systems (MERS) is not a “beneficiary” entitled to 
	foreclose under a deed of trust; and  (2) San Bernardino County, California,
	
	passed a resolution to consider plans to use eminent domain to address 
	the glut of underwater borrowers by purchasing and refinancing their loans. 
	 MERS is the electronic smokescreen that allowed banks to build their securitization Ponzi scheme without worrying about details like ownership and chain of title. According to trial attorney Neil Garfield, properties were sold to multiple investors or conveyed to empty trusts, subprime securities were endorsed as triple A, and banks earned up to 40 times what they could earn on a paying loan, using credit default swaps in which they bet the loan would go into default. As the dust settles from collapse of the scheme, homeowners are left with underwater mortgages with no legitimate owners to negotiate with. The solution now being considered is for municipalities to simply take ownership of the mortgages through eminent domain. This would allow them to clear title and start fresh, along with some other lucrative dividends. A major snag in these proposals has been that to make 
	them economically feasible, the mortgages would have to be purchased at less 
	than fair market value, in violation of eminent domain laws. 
	But for troubled properties with MERS in the title—which now seems to 
	be the majority of them—this may no longer be a problem. 
	If MERS is not a beneficiary entitled to foreclose, as held in 
	Bain, it is not entitled to assign that right or to assign title. 
	Title remains with the original note holder; and in the typical case, 
	the note holder can no longer be located or established, since the property 
	has been used as collateral for multiple investors. 
	In these cases, counties or cities may be able to obtain the 
	mortgages free and clear.  The 
	county or city would then be in a position to “do the fair thing,” settling 
	with stakeholders in proportion to their legitimate claims, and refinancing 
	or reselling the properties, with proceeds accruing to the city or county. 
	Bain v. MERS: 
	No Rights Without the Original Note 
	
	Although Bain is binding precedent only in Washington State, it is 
	well reasoned and is expected to be followed elsewhere. 
	
	The question, 
	said the panel, was “whether MERS and its associated business partners and 
	institutions can both replace the existing recording system established by 
	Washington statutes and still take advantage of legal procedures established 
	in those same statutes.”  The 
	Court held that they could not have it both 
	ways: Simply put, if MERS does not hold the note, it is not a 
	lawful beneficiary. . . . MERS suggests that, if we find a violation of the act, 
	"MERS should be required to assign its interest in any deed of trust to the 
	holder of the promissory note, and have that assignment recorded in the land 
	title records, before any non-judicial foreclosure could take place." But if 
	MERS is not the beneficiary as contemplated by Washington law, it is unclear 
	what rights, if any, it has to convey. Other courts have rejected similar 
	suggestions. [Citations omitted.] 
	If MERS has no rights that it can assign, the parties are back to square 
	one: the original holder of the promissory note must be found. 
	The problem is that many of these mortgage companies are no longer in 
	business; and even if they could be located, it is too late in most cases to 
	assign the note to the trusts that are being tossed this hot potato. 
	 
	Mortgage-backed securities are sold to investors in packages representing 
	interests in trusts called REMICs (Real Estate Mortgage Investment 
	Conduits), which are designed as tax shelters. 
	To qualify for that status, however, they must be "static." Mortgages 
	can't be transferred in and out once the closing date has occurred. The 
	REMIC Pooling and Servicing Agreement typically states that any transfer 
	after the closing date is invalid. Yet few, if any, properties in 
	foreclosure seem to have been assigned to these REMICs before the closing 
	date, in blatant disregard of legal requirements.  
	The whole business is quite complicated, 
	but the bottom line is that title has been clouded not only by MERS but 
	because the trusts purporting to foreclose do not own the properties by the 
	terms of their own documents.  
	Legally, the latter defect may be even more fatal than filing in the name of 
	MERS in establishing a break in the chain of title to securitized 
	properties.  
	
	What This Means for Eminent Domain Plans:  
	
	Focus on San Bernardino Under the plans that the San Bernardino County board of 
	supervisors voted to explore, the county would take underwater mortgages by 
	eminent domain and then help the borrowers into mortgages with significantly 
	lower monthly payments.   
	
	Objections voiced at the August 16th hearing included 
	suspicions concerning the role of Mortgage Resolution Partners, the private 
	venture capital firm bringing the proposal (would it make off with the 
	profits and leave the county footing the bills?), and where the county would 
	get the money for the purchases. 
	 A way around these 
	objections might be to eliminate the private middleman and proceed through a
	
	county land bank of 
	the sort set up in other states. 
	If the land bank focused on properties with 
	MERS in the chain of title (underwater, foreclosed or abandoned), it might 
	obtain a significant inventory of properties free and clear.  
	   The 
	county would simply need to give notice in the local newspaper of intent to 
	exercise its right of eminent domain. The burden of proof would then 
	transfer to the claimant to establish title in a court proceeding. 
	If 
	the court followed 
	Bain, title typically could not be proved 
	and would pass free and clear to the county land bank, which could sell or 
	rent the property and 
	work out a fair settlement 
	with the parties.  That would resolve not only the funding question but whether using eminent domain to cure mortgage problems constitutes an unconstitutional taking of private property. In these cases, there would be no one to take from, since no one would be able to prove title. The investors would take their place in line as unsecured creditors with claims in equity for actual damages. In most cases, they would be protected by credit default swaps and could recover from those arrangements. The investors, banks 
	and servicers all profited from the smokescreen of MERS, which shielded them 
	from liability. 
	As noted in 
	Bain: Critics of the MERS system point out that after 
	bundling many loans together, it is difficult, if not impossible, to 
	identify the current holder of any particular loan, or to negotiate with 
	that holder. . . . Under the MERS system, questions of authority and 
	accountability arise, and determining who has authority to negotiate loan 
	modifications and who is accountable for misrepresentation and fraud becomes 
	extraordinarily difficult.  
	Like MERS 
	itself, the investors must deal with the consequences of an anonymity so 
	remote that they removed themselves from the chain of title. 
	
	 On August 15th,
	
	the Federal Housing Finance Agency threatened to take action against 
	municipalities condemning federal property. 
	But to establish its claim, the FHFA, too, would have to establish 
	that the mortgages were federal 
	property; and under the Bain ruling, this could be difficult. 
	 
	Setting Things Right While banks and 
		investors were busy counting their profits behind the curtain of MERS, 
		homeowners and counties have been made to 
		bear the losses. 
		The city of San Bernardino is in such dire 
		straits that on August 1, it filed for bankruptcy. 
		 San Bernardino and 
		other counties are drowning in debt from a crisis created when Wall 
		Street’s real estate securitization bubble burst. 
		By using eminent domain, they can clean up 
		the destruction of their land title records and 400 years of real 
		property law. 
		And 
		
		by setting up their own banks, 
		counties and other municipalities can use their own capital and revenues 
		to generate credit for local purposes. 
		  Homeowners who paid much more for a home than it was 
		worth as a result of the securitization bubble have little chance of 
		challenging the legitimacy of their underwater mortgages on their own.  
		Insisting that their state and local governments follow the lead of 
		Washington State and San Bernardino County may be their best shot at 
		escaping debt peonage to their mortgage lenders. Ellen 
	Brown is an attorney and president of the Public Banking Institute,
	
	http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. 
	In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a 
	private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people 
	themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are
	http://WebofDebt.com and
	http://EllenBrown.com.
	
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